Kelly Barth like many American kids went to Sunday school sang songs about Zaccheas and was tucked in with bedtime prayers. A typical Christian kid that is until she developed a searingly deep crush on another little girl playing afterhours in church and more importantly until Jesus&amp;mdash;a tiny imaginary Jesus one that stays safely tucked behind the baseboard or the petals of a peony&amp;mdash;became her invisible friend and constant companion. </p><br><p>Heartbreakingly honest and hilarious <i>My Almost Certainly Real Imaginary Jesus</i> shows just how easy it can be to fall headlong into fundamentalism venturing into the very heart of enemy territory and the church&AElig;s false promises of altar calls and sexual cures. In the spirit of Anne Lamott&AElig;s <i>Traveling Mercies</i> this debut memoir is plainspoken speaking with candor and insight. Barth particularly addresses the disconnect between the radical and very human Jesus of history and the church&AElig;s supernatural savior. She asks the question to all in the closet&amp;mdash;both closet Christians and closet homosexuals: Which is more difficult admitting to being Christian or admitting to being gay?</p><br><p>An answer is found in her own hard-won journey a hopeful answer that is an attempt to leave a record of the early signs of the turning and softening of a collective heart. Giving voice to many who have searched for sanctuary in a church that has largely rejected them this story pauses at the threshold of one of a growing number of churches which in opening the door to her and other homosexuals welcome Jesus back inside as well.</p>